Faculty members participate in a variety of activities that contribute to communal scholarship and develop serviceable insight, all with an eye to equipping others to work effectively toward Christ-centered renewal in all aspects of contemporary life.

For works by faculty arranged by departments, please visit Faculty Work: By Department.

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Submissions from 2000

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Because the Unseen May Vanish, David Schelhaas, Poetry

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Boy in the Wind, Mike Vanden Bosch, Book

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Craft of Christian Teaching: A Classroom Journey, John Van Dyk, Book

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Engaged Praxis and a Reformed Worldview: Response to Brian Walsh From a Student's Perspective, Emily Hutten, Response or Comment

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Fire and Ice, Joanne Alberda, Artwork

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Gambling on Faith: A Holistic Examination of Blaise Pascal's Wager, Jan van Vliet, Article

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Global History or Western Civilization: A Symposium, Paul Otto, Feature Article

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Green Eye of the Storm (Book Review), Russell W. Maatman, Book Review

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"History Wars" -- "Holy Wars" or, History in Contention, Keith C. Sewell, Feature Article

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Home in Alfalfa (Book Review), John Van Rys, Book Review

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How Now Shall We Live (Book Review), Charles Veenstra, Book Review

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How the News Makes Us Dumb: The Death of Wisdom in an Information Society (Book Review), Tim P. Vos, Book Review

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Iced Magnolia, Joanne Alberda, Artwork

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Jane Austen's Falling Women, Mary Dengler, Poetry

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Logicion's Intuition II, Susan Van Geest, Artwork

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Me Mo, Jake Van Wyk, Artwork

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Moments, Susan Van Geest, Artwork

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Narene, Mike Vanden Bosch, Poetry

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Once, They Had Been Friends, James C. Schaap, Short Story

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Prairie Smoke, Joanne Alberda, Artwork

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Provocations: Spiritual Writings of Kierkegaard (Book Review), Charles C. Adams, Book Review

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Reading at Dusk, David Schelhaas, Poetry

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Regimes of Truth and the Rhetoric of Deceit -- From a Literary Perspective, John Van Rys, Response or Comment

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Regimes of Truth and the Rhetoric of Deceit -- From a Philosophical Perspective, Mark Tazelaar, Response or Comment

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Religion of Technology: The Divinity of Man and the Spirit of Invention and The Invisible Computer: Why Good Products Can Fail, the Personal Computer is So Complex, and Information Appliances are the Solution (Book Reviews), Charles C. Adams, Book Review